Shankland v. Mayor of Washington

30 U.S. 390, 8 L. Ed. 166, 5 Pet. 390, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 359
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 21, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 30 U.S. 390 (Shankland v. Mayor of Washington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shankland v. Mayor of Washington, 30 U.S. 390, 8 L. Ed. 166, 5 Pet. 390, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 359 (1831).

Opinion

Story, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the court. — This is a writ of error to the circuit court of the district of Columbia, sitting in the county of Washington. The original action was brought by the plaintiff in error, to recover the amount of one-half of the prize of $25,000, which was drawn in a lottery authorized by the corporation of Washington, by ticket No. 5591, of which the plaintiff asserted himself to be the owner and possessor, in the manner hereafter stated. The declaration was for money had and received ; and it was- agreed by the parties, to state a case, and if upon the case so stated, the court should be of opinion, that the corporation were liable to the plaintiff for the half of the prize sued for, judgment should be rendered upon the declaration for the amount due him accordingly. It was further agreed, that the question of the admissibility, competency and sufficiency of the evidence to maintain the action, should be submitted to the court ; and that in considering the evidence, the court should draw from it, so far as it was admissible and competent, every inference of fact and law which it would have been competent for a jury to have drawn from it. Upon this case, the circuit court gave judgment for the corporation, and the present writ of error is brought to review that judgment. i

The lottery was the same, which was brought before this court for consideration in the case of Clark v. Corporation of Washington, 12 Wheat. 40 ; and the leading facts being the same, it is unnecessary to do more than advert to those facts, which are peculiar to this case, and furnish the ground of argument to distinguish it from the former.

The decision in that case was, that the lottery was the lottery of the corporation ; that the tickets issued were the tickets of the corporation, contained a promise of the corporation, *made by its authorized agent, to _ pay such prizes as should be drawn by them ; that the sale of all the tickets in the lottery to Gillespie, under the contract made by him with the managers, was not a sale of an independent right to draw the lottery for himself, and on his own responsibility alone, but was in effect a sale of the profits of the lottery for a given sum. And the reasoning in the case shows, that Gillespie became the absolute owner of all the whole tickets signed in behalf of the corporation and delivered to him, but not of those unsigned ; and of course, the possessors of such signed tickets, whether himself or subsequent purchasers, were entitled to the prizes drawn to them from the corporation as promisees. If, therefore, the plaintiff in the present case -had been the possessor of the whole ticket, which drew the prize of $25,000, he *252 would have been clearly entitled to recover it from the corporation. But the whole ticket was in the hands of Gillespie, as possessor; and it was (as the state of the facts shows) delivered by him to the corporation, after the prize was drawn, without any notice on their part of any sub-interest in another ; and that upon such delivery, Gillespie received back from the corporation an equivalent value, in securities previously deposited by him with the corporation for the payment of prizes. As between Gillespie and themselves, the corporation have paid the prize ; they have paid it to the possessor, according to the terms of the ticket; and the question is, whether, under these circumstances, they are still liable to pay to the plaintiff, as owner of the half ticket, one-half of the amount, notwithstanding they had no notice of his interest or title ?

It is in evidence in the case, that all tickets sold in the lottery were sold by Gillespie, or his agents, and for his benefit; and all the moneys arising therefrom were received by him or his agents. This was, on his part, a proper proceeding ; for by the very terms of the contract, he was entitled to all the tickets signed and delivered to him ; and when he sold these tickets, he sold them as owner, on his own account, having already acquired a legal title thereto from the corporation. No half or quarter tickets were ever signed or issued by the managers of the lottery, or any of them. But it is * si in evidence, that one Webb, as clerk of Gillespie, was in the habit *of selling whole tickets, half tickets, and quarter tickets, and that, as the clerk of Gillespie, be sold to the plaintiff one-half of the ticket No. 5591. The whole ticket No. 5591 was signed by the president of the board of managers. The half or sub-ticket, purchased by the plaintiff, was in the following terms : “National Lottery: — Gillespie’s lottery office : — -No. 5591. This ticket will entitle the possessor to one-half of such prize as may be drawn to its number, if demanded within twelve months after the completion of the drawing ; subject to a deduction of fifteen per cent; payable sixty days after the drawing is finished. Washington City, February 7th, 1821. D. Gillespie, per John F. Webb :” and in the margin there was an abstract of the prizes to be drawn in the lottery. Does this sub-ticket constitute a contract, by which the corporation were bound to pay half the prize to the possessor, or is it the mere private contract of Gillespie ? Upon the face of the paper, it purports to be a contract, not for or on behalf of the corporation, but for and in behalf of Gillespie, by his agent Webb. Gillespie, and not the corporation, promises to pay the half prize drawn to it. In what manner, then, can it bind the corporation ?

In the first place, it was entirely competent for for Gillespie to enter into such a contract on his own account. As owner and possessor of the whole ticket, if he had made sale of the whole, it would have been on his account; for he, who sells as owner, cannot, in any just use of language, be said to sell as agent. He would have conveyed his own title, as he then held it, and not as agent of another. He would have substituted another as possessor and transferee, to whom the original promise of the corporation would then have attached. But Gillespie, as owner, had also a perfect right to sell any portion of such ticket, less than the whole. The parly to whom he should sell would thus become a joint owner with him ; but not a joint owner in virtue of any new contract made by the corporation, but by Gillespie, in his own right, and on his own account. The corporation promise to pay the *253 whole prize to the possessor of the whole ticket; but there is no promise on the face of the whole ticket that the corporation will pay any portion of the ¿>rize to any sub-holder of a * share ; and it is not in the power of a ' party, merely by his own acts, to split up a contract into fragments, *- and to make the promisor liable to every holder of a fragment for his share.

The language of this court in Mandeville v. Welch, 5 Wheat. 277, 286, leads to a very different conclusion. If .this had been the case of a banknote, payable to bearer, there is-no pretence to say, that a person claiming a moiety by contract with the bearer, could have maintained a suit against the bank upon such contract, for the moiety, when the note itself had been surrendered up to the bank by the bearer.

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Bluebook (online)
30 U.S. 390, 8 L. Ed. 166, 5 Pet. 390, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shankland-v-mayor-of-washington-scotus-1831.